Asdo Ahmad, Mawji Alishah, Omara Isaac, Aye Ishebukara Ivan Aine, Komugisha Clare, Novakowski Stefanie K, Pillay Yashodani, Wiens Matthew O, Akech Samuel, Oyella Florence, Tagoola Abner, Kissoon Niranjan, Ansermino John Mark, Dunsmuir Dustin
Department of Anesthesiology, Pharmacology & Therapeutics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Institute for Global Health, BC Children's Hospital and BC Women's Hospital + Health Centre, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2025 Jan 7;5(1):e0003097. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0003097. eCollection 2025.
Pneumonia is the leading cause of death in children globally. In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) pneumonia diagnosis relies on accurate assessment of respiratory rate, which can be unreliable when completed by nurses with less-advanced training. To inform more accurate measurements, we investigate the repeatability of the RRate app used by nurses in Ugandan district hospitals. This secondary analysis included 3,679 children aged 0-5 years. The dataset had two sequential measurements of respiratory rate collected by 14 nurses using the RRate app. We measured agreement between respiratory rate observations while indicating observations' clustering around WHO fast-breathing thresholds. WHO thresholds are 60 breaths per minute (bpm) for under two months (Age-1), 50 bpm for two to 12 months (Age-2), and 40 bpm for 12.1 to 60 months (Age-3). We assessed the repeatability of the paired measurements per user through the Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC) and calculated an overall ICC value. The respiratory rate measurement took less than 15 seconds for 7,277 (98.9%) of the measurements. Despite respiratory rates clustering around WHO thresholds, breathing classification based on the thresholds (Fast vs normal) was altered between sequential measurements in only 12.6% of children. The mean (SD) respiratory rate by age group was 60 (13.1) bpm for Age-1, 49 (11.9) bpm for Age-2, and 38 (10.1) for Age-3, and the bias (Limits of Agreements) were 0.3 (-10.8-11.3) bpm, 0.4 (-8.5-9.3) bpm, and 0.1 (-6.8, 7.0) bpm for Age-1, Age-2, and Age-3 respectively. The repeatability of the paired respiratory rate measurements was high, with an ICC ≥ 90% for 12 of 14 users and an overall ICC value (95% CI) of 0.95 (0.94-0.95). The RRate measurements were efficient and repeatable. The simplicity, repeatability, and efficiency support its usage in LMICs healthcare facilities, and endorses a more widespread clinical adoption.
肺炎是全球儿童死亡的主要原因。在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),肺炎诊断依赖于对呼吸频率的准确评估,而由训练水平较低的护士进行评估时,这可能并不可靠。为了获得更准确的测量结果,我们调查了乌干达地区医院护士使用的RRate应用程序的可重复性。这项二次分析纳入了3679名0至5岁的儿童。该数据集包含了14名护士使用RRate应用程序对呼吸频率进行的两次连续测量。我们测量了呼吸频率观测值之间的一致性,同时指出观测值围绕世界卫生组织(WHO)快速呼吸阈值的聚集情况。WHO的阈值分别为:两个月以下(年龄1)每分钟60次呼吸(bpm),两至12个月(年龄2)每分钟50次呼吸,12.1至60个月(年龄3)每分钟40次呼吸。我们通过组内相关系数(ICC)评估了每个用户配对测量的可重复性,并计算了总体ICC值。7277次(98.9%)测量的呼吸频率测量时间不到15秒。尽管呼吸频率聚集在WHO阈值附近,但在仅12.6%的儿童中,基于阈值(快速呼吸与正常呼吸)的呼吸分类在连续测量之间发生了改变。按年龄组划分的平均(标准差)呼吸频率,年龄1组为60(13.1)bpm,年龄2组为49(11.9)bpm,年龄3组为38(10.1)bpm,年龄1组、年龄2组和年龄3组的偏差(一致性界限)分别为0.3(-10.8至11.3)bpm、0.4(-8.5至9.3)bpm和0.1(-6.8至7.0)bpm。配对呼吸频率测量的可重复性很高,14名用户中有12名的ICC≥90%,总体ICC值(95%CI)为0.95(0.94至0.95)。RRate测量既高效又可重复。其简单性、可重复性和高效性支持在LMICs的医疗机构中使用它,并支持更广泛的临床应用。